Certified Montenegrin document translations
We provide fast Montenegrin translation services by professional and certified translators. Our certified document translation services are accepted for migration, business and legal purposes.
We are familiar with the certification required in different countries and provide English <> Montenegrin translations suitable for visa applications, migration and legal purposes. Even when it is not required, certification gives added assurance and confidence to customers of the quality of the translation. If you need certified translations or official certified translation from a translation company, we are able to provide these services with a 100% acceptance guarantee.
Type of documents we translate
- Academic transcript translation services
- Adoption certificate translation services
- Automotive and engineering translation services
- Auditor’s report and financial report translation services
- Bank statement translation services
- Business brochure translation services
- Business card or name card translation services
- Birth certificate translation services
- Certificate of good conduct translation services
- Coroner report translation services
- Death certificate translation services
- Degree certificate translation services
- Diploma translation services
- Divorce certificate translation services
- Driver’s license translation services
- Electricity bill translation services
- Email translation services
- Employment contract translation services
- Employment reference translation services
- Export permit translation services
- Financial translation services
- Identity card translation services
- Import permit translation services
- Legal translation services
- Letter and card translation services
- Marriage certificate translation services
- Medical report translation services
- Migration document translation services
- Motorcycle licence translation services
- Name-change certificate translation services
- Newspaper article translation services
- Passport translation services
- Penal clearance certificate translation services
- Police report translation services
- Police clearance translation services
- Power of attorney translation services
- Product packaging and labelling translation services
- Property title, deeds and transfers translation services
- Receipts and invoice translation services
- Single-status certificate translation services
- Statutory declaration translation services
- Survey translation services
- Telephone bill translation services
- Technical manuals or instruction booklet translation services
- Visa document translation services
- Wills translation services
- Website translation services
- WeChat message translation services
- WhatsApp message translation services
- Urgent or fast translation services
Our Montenegrin translator
- All the Montenegrin translations carried out by highly professional and dedicated Montenegrin translators.
- Each Montenegrin <> English translator is assigned specific documentation that they specialized in so they know the correct terminology and words used in the document.
- We adhere to deadlines
- 100% acceptance rate for visa application purposes
Get a quick quote for Montenegrin <> English translation services.
Montenegrins
Montenegrins are a nation and South Slavic people mainly living in the Balkans, primarily inhabiting Montenegro. Migrant communities exist in Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Albania, the Republic of Macedonia, Turkey, United States, Argentina, Germany, Luxembourg, Chile, Canada, and Australia.
Slavs have lived in the area of Montenegro since the 6th and 7th centuries in the medieval state of Doclea. Montenegro (Montenegrin: Crna Gora) got its present name during the rule of the Crnojević dynasty. After the Christmas Uprising (1919), which saw fighting between the pro-Petrovic guerrillas and the Karadjordjevic troops, supporters of Montenegrin king Nicholas I expressed opposition to unification with Serbia because it meant total disappearance of Montenegro, their leader Krsto Zrnov Popovic wanted to unify, but under the rule of king Nicholas I. After World War II, many Serbs of Montenegro began to identify themselves as Montenegrins. Following the collapse of Communism in Yugoslavia, however, some Montenegrins began to declare as Serbs again, while the largest proportion of citizens of Montenegro still preserved their Montenegrin self-identification. This has deepened further since the movement for full Montenegrin independence from the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia began to gain ground in 1991, and ultimately narrowly succeeded in the referendum of May 2006 (having been rejected in 1992).